Xtheme Font

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Alfie Overacre

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Aug 5, 2024, 2:37:05 PM8/5/24
to virinewithd
Theheader sizing is based from the base font of the body and content. The default sizing is currently in percentage which can only be overridden with a custom css. At the moment, there is no setting in the theme options to set a global sizing for the header. Please add the following CSS code in the X > Theme Options > Global CSS ( ) instead:

Please note that V2 elements styling would be dependent on what options are set from the options particular elements has including the font size. So even if you change the wrapper for like h2, or h3, the font size that the headline will follow will still be the font size that is set to the headline element. However, you could freely change it from px to em to %. Here is a screencast that you can take a look to change the values.


Hello ,

i Wood like use only Verdana System Font, now i have make a speed test and your Framwork load a Font libary from 92 kb. how can i make it this libary not to load? and my only Critical chain what i have if from xtheme pro

/wp-content/themes/pro/framework/fonts/font_awesome/fa-solid-900.woff2


Hey there, I'd like to disable the font awesome request completely, strip it from the the theme at best. I only use it a single time in my footer and this icon is going to be replaced my an .svg of mine. I know that it is not recommended, but I...


.x-panel-body-default only effects label, and .x-form-text-default only effects edit, combox ect. Others such as menu, button, grid, treeview, pagecontrol, panel.title, form.caption, don't change their fontsize.


There you will find the CSS files for the themes, for example the uni-xtheme-uni_bootstrap.css, inside of that file search for the comment "/* Button font sizes */", where the button font sizes are set. You can also override any other components font by adding to that file. To find the CSS class you right click on the component in Chrome and select "Inspect" from the popup menu. Which will open the developer tools from where you can locate the correct classes and much more.


When you use @font-face, you will have to make sure that all of the font files were uploaded into your server or else it will not exists thus will not display on other computers. So if your directory is then all of the font files should be uploaded in the WP installation wp-root/fonts/ folder.


It is very common to need to share sensitive information with our staff such as login or FTP information. In order to keep this private, be sure to use the Secure Note button that you will find at the bottom of each reply.


Some Wordpress setup restricts uploading certain file types in Media Library for security reasons (and that includes woff & woff2), so if the plugin conflict test did not work, please do the suggestion provided here.


What was the font you were using? It looks like you updated from a very old version of X where the Font Manager was not yet introduced and the Customizer was still used. This is maybe why in X > Theme Options > Typography, I see the Font Manager enabled and your Body and Heading font family are set to Inherit.


@Derek - different bits are controlled by different bits of the CSS. You can use 'inspect element' on your browser to find the specific style attributes and where they come from. The main one you're probably after, though, is in:


Change the font sizing here and you'll change it for all grid elements, i.e. the EPG, the DVR rules, access control, and similar. Menus, buttons and everything else will be untouched, so you don't lose screen estate to those. If you want to change those as well then you'll need to do some digging.


Hi there, To have a cross-browser experience regarding the custom fonts you will need to upload all font file types and add them in style.css. For more information: You can add custom fonts to your website using CSS3 @font-face rule. To do this,...


A client has upgraded their WordPress site to Theme X 10.0.2 (latest version) and Cornerstone 7.0.2 (latest version), and they have lost their custom fonts. Heading, body text, and button text are not appearing the same as they were before the updates.


In the meantime, the easiest workaround is to simply revert the plugin back to your previous version (roll back), OR revert to a recent auto-backup and you should find the custom fonts will work again. This is not a long-term solution to this issue, but should help you regain your custom fonts immediately.


Get a 30 minute 1:1 consult with a BIG consultant and get a 7 page report on making digital work in your organization with key insight into paths for success and playbooks just for your unique needs.


A slightly odd glitch to report. I am in the process of building a site with X theme, and regardless of the stack selected, the menu buttons are coming up in an odd font and blue colour, and nothing I change in appearance settings will overwrite it.


It might be the issue of cache or any plugin conflict just because font styles are overriding by any plugin styles or maybe custom CSS/JS. I would suggest you troubleshoot with a few of the common issues before we investigate your settings.


Upload any custom fonts to give your site an elegant look. Easily change fonts without CSS knowledge or select from 23,871+ predefined fonts to add to your site, including Google fonts stored on your server.


Mostly you can download the font files from internet. There are many sites that offer fonts. One of font directory we really like is Ultimate Fonts. They only have free fonts which are even free for commercial use. So you can install font and use in any website.


Ya, it works with any visual builder. For that you can assign class to those elements. Class name are same as font name. Also, we have full support for Divi Builder and SiteOrigin Page Builder. You can assign fonts using their font family dropdown.


Its built-in Font Upload and Font assign section allows you to assign custom fonts to any theme. However, for popular themes like Avada, X Theme, Flatsome, Salient, Porto, Shopkeeper, Oshine, WPLMS Learning Management System Theme, KLEO, WoodMart, ListingPro, SimpleMag, ROSA 1, 907, Voice, Grand Restaurant, LeadEngine, Service Finder, MagPlus, Hostiko, Adifier, Puca, GreenMart, Reco, VidoRev, Halena and many more known themes. (1000+). Check out full list here., we have added extra features that allows you to assign the custom font to your theme using the theme options panel.


Yes, our plugin allows you to assign fonts based on language. Currently, it supports WPML and Polylang, offering a quick font changer based on the language used. If you are using another multilingual plugin, please contact us, and we will try to integrate it with our plugin.


Actually, its not. Since I have used Classic text, there is no that option. I have used this differently for about 7-8 other pages. I have been able to change the font once, not with all the text element.


Have said it before, but a necessary and ideal eventual revamp for the Personalize area, imo, would be breaking Themes and Icons down into collections. Would help with organization, and maybe even loading times? The font screen could use some decluttering (both in terms of layout, and pruning the zanier ones), with in-list previews being helpful. Reorder, favorite, and hide would all be huge. I picture the Archive as a place with sections where you dump all unwanted lists/offerings.


Design Challenges. Once every 2 weeks or so on Twitter post a call to submit concepts for a new visual based on a specific prompt, choosing one winner. Would be good for engagement and keeping the fun times going.


Welcome!

I don't think this is possible, though others can say for sure(and it might be possible in IDE 2.x, but not 1.x).

But why do something differently than the rest of the world? Establish a naming convention, and stick with it, and all will be well. Many such exist; for your purposes, maybe:


Given the lack of comprehensible reply, pure speculation follows.

You think you can help some beginners by making it obvious which variables are global vs local, thus helping them manage memory resources for Arduinos which have limited memory resources.


Far better to teach them the differences, and variable scoping, right from the beginning, so they can do it right from the start. Fancy display techniques won't help much, using their minds will. Just a free opinion, for what it's worth!


Arduino IDE 1.x does have a theming system, which allows you to configure the colors and fonts. However, the IDE doesn't have any knowledge of which variables are local vs. global, so there aren't separate theme settings for each variable type. In addition, the font is only configurable for each panel of the IDE window. At the sub-panel granularity, only the color is configurable.


Arduino IDE 2.x has a completely different theme system. Although its theming system is generally more capable and intelligent than the Arduino IDE 1.x theme system, I still don't think it provides the capability to style local vs. global variables differently.


However, instead of using an awareness of the program, Arduino IDE actually identifies which code elements to color according to these settings by doing a string comparison against lists of keywords in keywords.txt configuration files that were manually created by the core and library authors:


I try to write for those with little knowledge, so if you think the wording can be better on any post/documentation entry, please come back. What is clear to an author is often not clear to everyone else, so please add to improving the codex and posts where people like me are not clear, and as you learn more, please visit the support forum and see if you can help one or two others with their problems.

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